A big military parade for the celebrations of Niki Day – the 80th anniversary of Nazi Germany and the end of World War II in Europe – will take place today in Moscow, in the Red Square, under the eyes of Vladimir Putin and about twenty foreign leaders.

Among those present are Chinese President Xi Jinping and Brazilian President Louise Inasio Lula da Silva.

Serbian President Aleksandar Vucic and Slovak Prime Minister Robert Fico are the only European leaders in the parade.

Other guests include the leaders of Indonesia, Burkina Faso, Bosnia, Egypt, Zimbabwe, Iraq, Congo, Myanmar, Cuba, Ethiopia and Equatorial Guinea, as well as traditional allies in Central.

The leaders of Armenia and Azerbaijan also attend, along with the leaders of Southern Ossetia and Abkhazia, two pro -Russian secession areas of Georgia, which are not internationally recognized as independent states.

Later, the Russian president is going to speak before the Russian troops.

For the last three years, Putin has mentioned the memory of victory over Nazi Germany to defend the military attack on Ukraine, with Russia assuring that it wants to “deceive” this neighboring country, which controls about 20%.

Invalid the truce

Vladimir Putin announced a 3 -day ceasefire in Ukrania from yesterday, Thursday, in the morning, which Kiev described as a “farce”, complaining that Moscow hit eight Ukrainian settlements in the area of ​​Zaporizia 220.

Only in the last 24 hours, the villages were hit by 150 unmanned aerial vehicles and 70 artillery missiles, according to region governor Ivan Fedorov.

Today, the local authorities of the Regions of Hersona and Dnipropetrovsk announced that two men aged 60 and 83 were injured by the blows of Russian unmanned aircraft.

However, the Russian forces assured that they “strictly respect” the ceasefire, arguing that they were “responding” to Ukrainian violations.